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Publication : Precisely Timed Nicotinic Activation Drives SST Inhibition in Neocortical Circuits.

First Author  Urban-Ciecko J Year  2018
Journal  Neuron Volume  97
Issue  3 Pages  611-625.e5
PubMed ID  29420933 Mgi Jnum  J:261472
Mgi Id  MGI:6150524 Doi  10.1016/j.neuron.2018.01.037
Citation  Urban-Ciecko J, et al. (2018) Precisely Timed Nicotinic Activation Drives SST Inhibition in Neocortical Circuits. Neuron 97(3):611-625.e5
abstractText  Sleep, waking, locomotion, and attention are associated with cell-type-specific changes in neocortical activity. The effect of brain state on circuit output requires understanding of how neuromodulators influence specific neuronal classes and their synapses, with normal patterns of neuromodulator release from endogenous sources. We investigated the state-dependent modulation of a ubiquitous feedforward inhibitory motif in mouse sensory cortex, local pyramidal (Pyr) inputs onto somatostatin (SST)-expressing interneurons. Paired whole-cell recordings in acute brain slices and in vivo showed that Pyr-to-SST synapses are remarkably weak, with failure rates approaching 80%. Pharmacological screening revealed that cholinergic agonists uniquely enhance synaptic efficacy. Brief, optogenetically gated acetylcholine release dramatically enhanced Pyr-to-SST input, via nicotinic receptors and presynaptic PKA signaling. Importantly, endogenous acetylcholine release preferentially activated nicotinic, not muscarinic, receptors, thus differentiating drug effects from endogenous neurotransmission. Brain state- and synapse-specific unmasking of synapses may be a powerful way to functionally rewire cortical circuits dependent on behavioral demands.
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